Wildflower/Perennial

Common yarrow

Achillea millefolium · Asteraceae

Also called: Yarrow, Milfoil, Western yarrow, Soldier's woundwort

Common yarrow (Achillea millefolium) is a low-water wildflower/perennial well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun.

Common yarrow (Achillea millefolium) growing in Tucson
Photo: SAplants (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Common yarrow at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; tolerates light afternoon shade in the low desert, which helps it through peak summer heat.
Mature size
1-3 ft tall in bloom and spreading 1-2+ ft wide via rhizomes.
Growth rate
Fast; can be aggressive/spreading where well-watered.
Bloom
Flat-topped clusters of white (wild form) or, in cultivars, yellow, gold, pink, red, salmon, or terracotta., Late spring into summer in Tucson, with possible rebloom in fall if deadheaded; tends to slow in peak heat.
Cold hardiness
Very cold-hardy and frost-tolerant in USDA 9a-9b; tops may brown in summer heat but the plant is durable.
Soil
Highly adaptable; thrives in lean, well-drained soils and tolerates poor, rocky, alkaline Tucson soils. Avoid wet, heavy ground.
Native range
Circumboreal/Northern Hemisphere; native forms occur across much of North America including parts of Arizona's higher elevations, but it is not a low-desert Sonoran native. Most landscape forms are non-native cultivars.
Best used as
Pollinator garden, Xeriscape and low-water beds, Groundcover/filler, Cut and dried flowers, Erosion control
Wildlife
Attracts bees, butterflies, hoverflies, and other beneficial insects; ferny foliage is deer- and rabbit-resistant.
Toxicity
Mildly toxic - can cause skin photodermatitis/contact dermatitis in sensitive people, and is mildly toxic to dogs, cats, and horses if eaten (vomiting, drooling). Flag for pet households; low risk to kids.

How to grow Common yarrow in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought-tolerant once established. Water deeply every 7-10 days in summer and every 2-3 weeks in winter; let soil dry between irrigations. Overwatering causes floppy growth and root rot.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Very low needs. Little to no fertilizer required; a light spring compost top-dressing is plenty. Rich soil makes it flop and spread aggressively.

Pruning & care

Deadhead spent flower clusters to encourage rebloom and prevent excess reseeding; shear back after bloom and cut down old foliage in late winter. Divide clumps every 2-3 years to keep vigorous.

Notes

Tough, ferny-leaved perennial that spreads by rhizomes - give it room or contain it. Keep it lean and on low water for the best, least floppy form in Tucson. Colored cultivars are showier than the white species.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; USDA NRCS PLANTS Database; ASPCA toxic/non-toxic plant list

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library